The head of a major fast food chain in Ireland expressed concern that the country could face food shortages in the coming winter and told the public they needed to stock up.
Pat McDonagh, president of local fast food chain Supermac’s, has warned the public that Ireland may experience food shortages this winter and people need to stock up on nonperishable foods.
In his warning Wednesday, McDonagh focused heavily on the country’s manure challenges, whose absence could split farmers’ harvests, something that hasn’t stopped somehow in countries like Sri Lanka, the Netherlands and Canada. from trying to limit the use of fertilizers for the benefit of environmental programmes.
In an interview with local publisher Newstalk, McDonagh said that his fast food empire is already suffering from rising food prices, and that the general public, already suffering from an energy and housing crisis, will soon cope with food shortages as a result of the war. in Ukraine.
“In a way, there may be some food shortages at the end of winter and closer to December,” said the publisher’s Supermac manager.
“For example, the price of vegetable oil has almost doubled in the last six months, as most of it is made from sunflowers in Ukraine,” he continued.
For many farmers in the region, crops have been disrupted, with local food producers forced to go without fertilizers due to high prices, McDonagh said, which could add to the burden of food insecurity.
“I recommend people buy shelf-stable foods in advance,” he said.
Dutch farmers block roads with soil and burn hay to protest the global climate agendahttps://t.co/Ayf31pOOzL
— Breitbart London (@BreitbartLondon) 27 July 2022
The fast food czar’s emphasis on the importance of fertilizer echoes warnings at the start of the crisis in Ukraine that a shortage of basic inputs could cut crops in half, thereby increasing food prices for both countries. short and medium term.
Despite the obvious importance of growing food to feed people and the problems that can arise if that supply is interrupted, as all of Europe now knows, many countries, including Sri Lanka, the Netherlands and Canada, are restricting agriculture, including shutdown. reducing farmland and limiting the use of fertilizers in favor of green targets.
In Canada, far-left Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has set a limit on the amount of fertilizer farmers are allowed to use, despite protests from local growers that the limits are “arbitrary” and will endanger their livelihoods and food. Prices for Canadian citizen.
Local publications began comparing the crackdown to agriculture taking place in the Netherlands, and the “green agenda” measures sparked widespread protests from farmers that would endanger 30% of the country’s farms.
Forced by the EU to implement environmental measures, the Dutch government has announced measures to reduce nitrogen pollution levels by up to 95 percent in some areas, suggesting that the inevitable bankruptcy of some farms is an important part of the “inevitable”. change.”
Although the Green Agenda measures sparked strong protests that disrupted daily life in the country, the Netherlands is still in a better position than Sri Lanka, which has suffered severe shortages of food, fuel and drugs due to government mismanagement. . Including banning fertilizers as part of a nationwide mandatory transition to organic farming.
The plan backfired badly, and the dire physical and economic conditions in the state led to widespread protests that even forced the country’s president to flee the country.
Source: Breitbart